Breaking Art News Daily Worldwide

DIRECTOR VILSONI HERENIKO PREMIERES HIS VERY PERSONAL “SINA MA TINIRAU” AT HIFF

by Robert F. Kay


Vilsoni Hereniko, known to his friends as Vili, has come a long way from his native Rotuma, a Polynesian outlier in the far reaches of the Fiji archipelago. Inspired by the island’s folklore as told to him by his father, the Honolulu-based filmmaker and Professor at the Academy for Creative Media at the University of Hawai’i has just released his latest film, Sina ma Tinirau, (Sina and Tinirau) which is currently being screened at the Hawai’i International Film Festival. The animated short film tells an epic tale at a running time of nine minutes.


In Rotuman oral literature, Sina, a beautiful woman, and Tinirau a handsome man, are two mythological icons. Their story goes something like this: A prince, who is cursed to become an eel, must win the love of a beautiful woman to become human again. He gifts her with his body in the form of a coconut palm in a seductive display of courtship. The film is narrated in English with some dialogue in Rotuman, with subtitles. This lends an authenticity to the story.



In his retelling of an ancient tale for today’s world, Hereniko takes a page from Carl Jung by interpreting a legend that is as central to the Polynesian collective unconscious as the Crucifixion of Jesus would be in the West. In doing so, he makes the wisdom of traditional Polynesia accessible to the rest of us.


In the words of Selina Tusitala Marsh, former New Zealand Poet Laureate, "Hereniko combines sonorous storytelling with visually vibrant animation to tell a hanuju, a Rotuman mythic version of Oceania’s greatest love stories of all time.”


“Sina ma Tinirau” says Hereniko, “is an ancient, oral tale that has endured the test of time because it embodies our sensibilities, worldviews, and aesthetics as Polynesians.” It’s not a conventional romantic love story between a man and a woman.”


Rather, he explains, “it’s an unconditional, Christ-like love exemplified by forgiveness.”


“Even though Tinirau’s head was severed, and Sina betrayed him, he gave the Polynesian people, personified by Sina, the tree of life. This gift enabled us to survive. It’s the most useful and most important tree to us.”


For Vili Hereniko, the coconut palm’s appeal is quite personal.


“As one of 11 kids, growing up on a remote South Pacific Island,” says the filmmaker, “on several occasions that tree saved my life. We didn’t always have enough food to eat. When the weather was bad, we survived on coconut meat and water.”


Hereniko said that when he first came to Hawai’i and observed that coconuts had been removed in all the parks and public places, it upset him in a visceral way. He called the trees “eunuchs”. It also disturbed him that many people were seemingly not bothered by what he observed as a kind of cultural castration.


“It’s a matter of education, learning how to live with trees,” said Hereniko. “I mean, no one in Fiji would have a picnic under a coconut tree. They know better.” By transforming a source of food and water (at least) to become just a pretty dance tree and symbol of Paradise, local residents are denied the food and sustenance that the trees provide.


Hereniko also said his film touches upon the “shadow” side of the Polynesians, specifically their prejudice against black skin.



“It’s something that no one talks about in public”, says Hereniko, “but it’s ubiquitous in my culture and in Polynesian society in general. The bias is there, and I wanted to bring it to the surface”. (In the myth, Sina is fair skinned and the eel is black. Sina rejects the eel’s advances at first because of its black skin).


The University of Hawai’i at Manoa Collaboration in Film and Animation Strategic Investment Grant provided initial funding to make the film, but Hereniko tapped the European Research Council, a European Union entity, which gave him more funding to complete the project.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Rob Kay, a Honolulu-based author, writes about technology and sustainability for the Honolulu Star Advertiser. He is the creator and publisher of Fiji Guide, Click Here. He can be reached at RobertFredKay@gmail.com.  

 

 

Back to Main Page

 

 



Gordy Grundy

RESOURCES
Dictionary

Thesaurus
Drudge Worldwide Weather
Maps
NightOut

Reference Desk

FKA CINEMA
Birth.Movies.Death.
Collider
Deadline
Roger Friedman
Lloyd Grove
Hollywood Dementia
Hollywood Reporter
IMDB
IndieWire
Rotten Tomatoes
Variety

TECHNO
Boing Boing
Engineering & Technology
Innovation & Tech Today
Jalopnik
MIT Technology Review
National Geographic
NASA
Tech Briefs
The Verge
Wired

LAUGHS
Bizarro
Butcher and Wood
Dave Barry
The Chive
CNN
Doonesbury
Funny Or Die
NYT Loose Ends
The Onion
Popbitch
Smoking Gun

HALCYON
Daily Beast

Esquire
The New Yorker
New York Magazine
Los Angeles Magazine
Town and Country
Vanity Fair

 

BEAUTY INSIDE + OUT
Abitare
Architectural Digest
Architecural Record
Dwell
Elle Decor
Gray
House Beautiful
House and Garden
Interior Design
Metropolis
Veranda
Wallpaper
World of Interiors

MISTER CHOW
Art of Eating
Bon Appetit
Cooks Illustrated
Epicurious
Fine Cooking
Food & Wine
Gastronomica
Saveur
You Grow Girl

TRAVEL
Adventure Journal
AFAR
Conde Nast Traveler
The Culture-ist
Go Nomad
Go World Travel
Matador Network
National Geographic Traveller
Travel + Leisure
Vagabondish
Wanderlust

MAN + NATURE
Fine Gardening
Garden Design
Land 8
Landscape Architecture Magazine
Landscape Architecture Foundation
World Landscape Architecture

FASHION
Allure

Cosmopolitan
Elle
Fashionista
Fashion
Glamour
GQ
Look
Marie Claire
NYT Style Magazine
Teen Vogue
Vogue
Vogue China
Vogue India
Vogue Italy
Vogue Paris
Women's Wear Daily

FINE ARTS
Artsy
Artforum
Artillery
Apollo
Art F City
Art Almanac
Art and Australia
Art Daily
Art Fix Daily
Art in America
Art Monthly
Artnet
Artnews
Art Review
Artspace
Blouton ArtInfo
Brooklyn Street Art
Burnaway
Deviant Art
Flash Art
Frieze
Glasstire
Hi·Fructose
Hyperallergic
Juxtapoz
Parkett
Saatchi Art
The Art Newspaper
White Hot

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PRIVACY POLICY
TERMS OF USE
AD CHOICES
PRIVACY RIGHTS

 


 

 


News Tips? Email: info@ArtReportToday.com


Advertise With Us! Email: info@ArtReportToday.com



ART REPORT TODAY
Blue Chip, Red Dot
Art Noir
: True Crime in the Art World
Artists Who Catch Our Eye
Collectors' Cache
Sent From My Phone: Nicolas Vorvolakos
Yes, Chef Tara: New Recipes
Archives
Art Report Today: Our Podcasts

ART PODCASTS
Arts & Ideas
Art History Babes
Bad At Sports
Brett Easton Ellis
Art Curious
CAA How To
Michael Delgado
Tyler Green
The Lonely Planet
NPR Fresh Air
A Piece of Work Abbi Jacobson
Raw Material SFMOMA
Sculptor's Funeral
Hrag Vartanian- Hyperallergic

BOOKS
Book Search
A. G. Geiger

Book Riot
Catapult
Electric Literature
Jane Friedman
Goodreads
Literary Hub
The Rumpus
Vol. 1 Brooklyn

IDOLATRY
Page Six

People
Popbitch
TMZ

MUSIC
Alternative Press
Billboard
BBC Classical Music
Downbeat
Kerrang!
MOJO
NME
Revolver
Rolling Stone
SPIN